All of these reforms impacted our nation in immense ways. Her Settlement House reform helped immigrants have a better place to live. Jane Addams founded the Hull House, in Chicago, Illinois with associate Ellen Gates Starr, where many European immigrants had gone to improve their lives. It had better housing and sanitation and it provided education for people. This led to her strengthening social progress because this helped people support her. Nurseries, a kindergarten, playgrounds, and housing for younger working women were built to help improve people’s lives. Women’s rights were one of Jane Addams’ biggest movements. She was part of a campaign to let women vote and they wanted to carry on the campaign for civil liberties.The 19th amendment, in 1920, was established to give women the right of suffrage because of this …show more content…
Addams’ confronted the idea of the boss rule because she realized that the needs of the community could not be satisfied unless there were laws to improve it. Her and many others sponsored laws, or legislation, in hopes to get get rid of child labor, limit work hours for women, start juvenile courts, shine light on labor unions, and other campaigns. To abolish child labor, the Owen-Keaton act was formed, and it stated that one can’t hire anyone under 14 years old to legally work under them. The 19th amendment was also set to allow women’s right to vote in political elections. The progressive party, including Theodore Roosevelt, comply to her many reforms in their platform of